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The news about “Poo-casso,” as reported by Page Six, comes from the famous artist’s granddaughter, Diana Widmaier Picasso, and is a long-held “family secret,” according to the book. It’s unclear how often Picasso turned to this unconventional art supply, which was reportedly featured in a 1938 still life.

Picasso is said to have used his daughter Maya’s feces to paint an apple on the canvas. She was just three years old at the time.

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As gross as the medium might seem, Widmaier Picasso is mainly impressed by her grandfather’s ingenuity: “Picasso had already told André Breton in 1933 that he wanted to use real, dried excrement for one of his still life paintings, specifically those inimitable turds that he happened to notice in the countryside when children ate cherries without bothering to spit out their pits,” she wrote. “The revulsion that this material might provoke is instead transformed into amazement as we grasp the full imagination of the artist.”

Picasso, of course, isn’t the only artist to employ excrement in his work. Chris Ofili’s Holy Virgin Mary, for instance, became a lightening rod for controversy at the Brooklyn Museum back in 1996, causing offense by incorporating elephant dung into its depiction of the saint. There are also several museumsdedicated solely to fecal matter.